A Global Debt Crisis Is Unlikely In the Near-Term, Even As More Defaults Loom, Report Says
S&P Global Ratings reported that despite a record global debt-to-GDP ratio of 267%, a debt crisis is unlikely in the near term. The projected global debt will decline to 258% by year-end 2021. The recovery hinges on successful vaccine rollouts and spending adjustments, with real GDP growth forecasted at 5% for 2021. However, elevated debt levels may lead to higher default risks, with speculative-grade defaults predicted to rise to 7% in the U.S. and 6.5% in Europe by year-end. Interest rates are expected to normalize as the recovery progresses.
- Global debt-to-GDP ratio projected to decline from 267% to 258% by end of 2021.
- Forecasted real GDP growth of 5% in 2021 indicates economic recovery.
- Default rates are expected to rise, reaching 7% for the U.S. and 6.5% for Europe by year-end.
- Elevated corporate debt may prolong the recovery of credit metrics in hard-hit sectors.
MELBOURNE, Australia, March 10, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- (S&P Global Ratings) -- While the ratio of global debt-to-GDP is at a record high, the continuing recovery of the global economy will likely prevent a debt crisis any time soon, S&P Global Ratings said in its report "Global Debt Leverage: Near-Term Crisis Unlikely, Even As More Defaults Loom," published March 10.
Global debt to GDP has been rising for many years; the pandemic simply exacerbated the trend. While global debt hit a record (estimated)
We forecast real global GDP growth at
Either way, higher global leverage means elevated default risk. S&P Global Ratings thinks defaults may hit levels not seen since 2009. Moreover, heavy corporate debt may delay the recovery of credit metrics beyond 2022 for hard-hit sectors, such as airlines and leisure.
Our baseline expectation is for the U.S. trailing 12-month speculative-grade corporate default rate to rise to
Government monetary and fiscal policies have bolstered prices of financial and real assets. While we expect policy rates to remain low, creditors fearing inflation or reacting to an unexpected adverse event could reset risk-return expectations, resulting in higher debt-servicing costs and reduced accessibility to funding. Interest rates are already beginning to normalize as the COVID recovery gathers pace.
"A normalization of interest rates owing to a strong COVID recovery is natural," said S&P Global Ratings Senior Research Fellow Terence Chan. "That said, the speed and volatility of the path towards normalization is more of a concern."
The recent jump in longer-term U.S. nominal yields has been notable. A gradual rise in real yields could simply reflect improved confidence in the economic outlook (inflation expectations would seem to imply the same). Credit spreads may drift higher as real yields rise, but again this could simply mean more confidence in the future.
Nonetheless, markets have shown a tendency to react strongly to the withdrawal of policy stimulus, and this point may be brought closer by the recovery implicit in rising yields. A rapid and volatile reset of investors' risk-return expectations could result in a sharp repricing of financial and real assets, rising debt-servicing costs (hitting borrowers that assumed rates would be "lower for longer") and drying up funding accessibility for some borrowers.
This report does not constitute a rating action.
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SOURCE S&P Global Ratings
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